Open AccessBook Chapter
Privacy : code in context
Jaap-Henk Hoepman,Bart Jacobs +1 more
- 01 Jan 2011
- pp 237-252
TL;DR: Privacy: het belang van context and de invloed van code "Je hebt toch niet te verbergen?” as discussed by the authors is a retorische vraag wordt vaak gebruikt om een pleidooi voor de bescherming van de privacy te ontkrachten.
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Abstract: Privacy: het belang van context en de invloed van code ’Je hebt toch niets te verbergen?’ Deze retorische vraag wordt vaak gebruikt om een pleidooi voor de bescherming van de privacy te ontkrachten. Maar in feite volstaat een eenvoudig ’Ja zeker wel, en jij trouwens ook!’ als antwoord. ~ Privacy is een lastig te definieren begrip (Solove 2010). Dat blijkt ook wel uit de andere bijdragen in dit jaarboek, waarin verschillende auteurs privacy ieder vanuit hun eigen perspectief behandelen. Wij zullen in dit hoofdstuk privacy vanuit een technologisch perspectief benaderen. Nieuwe toepassingen van ICT zetten privacy onder druk. We zullen echter laten zien hoe een verantwoord gebruik van technologie ook kan leiden tot een verbetering van onze privacy, juist doordat deze technologie het mogelijk maakt contexten te scheiden en privacybescherming te zien als meer dan alleen het beschermen van de confidentialiteit.
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Citations
•Journal Article
Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace
TL;DR: Larry Lessig's insightful Code seeks to warn longtime inhabitants of cyberspace of a major danger to the wild, unregulated, "1960s-like" environments to which they have grown accustomed and advocates collective decision making where code may have major consequences with respect to important societal liberties.
226
References
Untraceable electronic mail, return addresses, and digital pseudonyms
TL;DR: A technique based on public key cryptography is presented that allows an electronic mail system to hide who a participant communicates with as well as the content of the communication - in spite of an unsecured underlying telecommunication system.
Untraceable Electronic Mail, Return Address and Digital Pseudonyms
David Chaum
- 01 Jan 1981
Abstract: A technique based on public key cryptography is presented that allows an electronic mail system to hide who a participant communicates with as well as the content of the communication - in spite of an unsecured underlying telecommunication system. The technique does not require a universally trusted authority. One correspondent can remain anonymous to a second, while allowing the second to respond via an untraceable return address. The technique can also be used to form rosters of untraceable digital pseudonyms from selected applications. Applicants retain the exclusive ability to form digital signatures corresponding to their pseudonyms. Elections in which any interested party can verify that the ballots have been properly counted are possible if anonymously mailed ballots are signed with pseudonyms from a roster of registered voters. Another use allows an individual to correspond with a record-keeping organization under a unique pseudonym, which appears in a roster of acceptable clients.
3K
Untraceable Electronic Mail, Return Addresses and Digital Pseudonyms.
David Chaum
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: In this article, a technique based on public key cryptography is presented that allows an electronic mail system to hide who a participant communicates with as well as the content of the communication -in spite of an unsecured underlying telecommunication system.
2.8K
Privacy in Context: Technology, Policy, and the Integrity of Social Life
TL;DR: Arguing that privacy concerns should not be limited solely to concern about control over personal information, Helen Nissenbaum counters that information ought to be distributed and protected according to norms governing distinct social context, be it workplace, health care, schools, or among family and friends.
2.3K
Security without identification: transaction systems to make big brother obsolete
TL;DR: The large-scale automated transaction systems of the near future can be designed to protect the privacy and maintain the security of both individuals and organizations.